The emission output at tail pipe can be used to check causes of little air or too much fuel. The emission output can check the levels of water vapor, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen and particulate carbon soot.
It is a part of the exhaust that reduces tail pipe emissions, through a chemical reaction.
To cut down on the harmful emissions leaving the tail pipe.
It stands for Partial Zero Emissions Vehicle. It's a strange concept but it means that a vehicle has nearly zero tail pipe emissions.
yes a split vacuum hose/pipe will effect emissions it changes the air/fuel mixture and depending on the year of the vehicle the engines computer can not compensate for the leak and car will fail a tail pipe test in some cases the check engine light will be on
you could pipe the output of `tail` into `wc`, something like $ tail <filename> | wc
The main tail pipe emissions are carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water, nitrous oxide, and unburnt hydro carbons.
Exhaust Gas Recirculation. A small amount of exhaust gas is fed back into the cylinder to lower combustion temperatures and lower tail pipe emissions.
not goot
There are many PDMS piping modeling commands. Some of these include: Q axes at ph= to check the head of the branch of the pipe, Q axes at pt= to check the tail of the branch of the pipe, Q Hstu= to show the branch head tube attribute, and Q Lstu= to show the branch tail tube attribute.
Yes they have them.
Flomasters
Explain what it is doing! is water coming out of the tail pipe? do you see white smoke coming out of the tail pipe?